A unique confluence of life sciences and tech
The talk of the conference was all about the need for partnership and collaboration, because medical research — cancer research in particular — is increasingly driven by data. A treasure-trove of such data is being unearthed at the Hutch and elsewhere as an array of new laboratory technologies are probing the genetic roots of diseases and of the immune system.
Trunnell and Dr. Gary Gilliland, president and director of Fred Hutch, each hosted lunchtime panels during the two-day conference discussing how the medical science and tech communities of the region are increasingly working together.
“One of the ways we differentiate ourselves in Seattle from the rest of the planet is the unique congruence of life science capabilities and tech,’’ said Gilliland. He moderated a discussion between Chad Robins, chief executive officer of Hutch spin-off Adaptive Biotechnologies, of Seattle, and Dr. Peter Lee, corporate vice president for artificial intelligence and research at Microsoft, in Redmond, Washington.
The two companies are collaborating to apply Microsoft’s artificial intelligence technologies in its cloud-computing product, Azure, to help Adaptive develop a kind of digitized map of the human immune system.
Using DNA sequencing, Adaptive scientists are matching “receptor” molecules, found on the surfaces of disease-fighting blood components such as T cells, with “antigens,” which are bits of telltale proteins that show up on the surfaces of diseased cells. When a T-cell receptor connects to a matching antigen on a cancer cell, the T cell can wipe out the cancer cell.
Those fateful molecular matches are at the heart of a revolution in cancer involving immunotherapy, the harnessing of the human immune system to fight disease. There are billions of such potential matches, so it takes enormous computing capacity to keep track of them and visualize them in something resembling a map. That is where Microsoft’s cloud capabilities come into play.